Yarbun Creations

Yarbun Creations Yarbun Creations make handmade quality First Nations products by descendants of the Ghungalu & Yuwi

01/03/2026

Danielle Lyn Poteet, we are trying to reach you in regard to an order that needs to be shipped interstate.

Unfortunately, the email address and phone number provided with the order are not working, and we are unable to finalise shipping without connecting with you.

If you are on our page and see this post, could you please reach out to us as soon as possible at [email protected]
so we can organise your order.

Thank you so much, and we look forward to hearing from you soon.

Last minute order 30 Gumbi Gumbi Tea Bags 30 soaps and a big beautiful gift box full of Yarbun goodness.My girls are sup...
23/02/2026

Last minute order 30 Gumbi Gumbi Tea Bags 30 soaps and a big beautiful gift box full of Yarbun goodness.

My girls are super stars geez I'm a lucky mum habing my gurls lock in and supportingour family business.

New labels for our Gumbi Gumbi lemon myrtle bath salts!A great way to treat your skin with our ancient medicines
11/02/2026

New labels for our Gumbi Gumbi lemon myrtle bath salts!

A great way to treat your skin with our ancient medicines

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AfeHXk9Rv/
09/02/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AfeHXk9Rv/

Talk all you want 🇦🇺 we know the truth and what happens in our Community and we call it !!

Australia’s decade‑old Indigenous Procurement Policy (IPP) has delivered a major injection of federal spending to Indigenous‑owned businesses... but new research shows much of that money has flowed to a surprisingly small group of companies.

A peer‑reviewed study by The Australian National University researcher Dr Christian Eva, based on freedom‑of‑information data from the National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) examined all IPP contracts worth $10,000 or more awarded between 2015-16 and 2022-23, which represents more than 99 per cent of the total value of IPP spending.

In the first eight years of the policy, from 2015 to mid‑2023, 12,800 such contracts worth $7 billion went to just over 900 Indigenous firms. Of that $7 billion, $3.5 billion (exactly half) went to only 18 companies. Half of all contracts by number, 6,415 in total, went to just 11 businesses...

The study also highlights how ownership structures shape who benefits. It finds 47 per cent of total contract value went to businesses that were between 50 and 51 per cent Indigenous‑owned, with another 27 per cent going to firms whose Indigenous ownership status was not recorded in the data.

That leaves less than a third of spending going to entities that are clearly majority‑Indigenous owned beyond the bare minimum.
Geography is another fault‑line with more than 5,200 contracts (over 40 per cent of the total) and 30 per cent of their value ($2.1 billion) went to firms based in Canberra, even though the ACT is home to roughly 1 per cent of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and there were close to 14,000 Indigenous businesses nationally by 2022.

Advocates say the pattern doesn’t look like broad‑based economic development and is just benefiting a few "elites"...

And with so many contracts concentrated among a small cluster of firms close to federal departments, they argue the system rewards “nepotism by familiarity” - officials repeatedly returning to suppliers they already know, while newer and regional businesses struggle to get a first contract. That concern has been echoed in parliamentary debates where senators have questioned whether access to the IPP is genuinely open to Indigenous businesses across the country.

Heading down to stock up Everlasting Connections Mackay at Mount Pleasant Shopping Centre opposite the jewellers near th...
31/01/2026

Heading down to stock up Everlasting Connections Mackay at Mount Pleasant Shopping Centre opposite the jewellers near the food court with Gumbi Gumbi Capsules and tea today!

Thanks to some feedback from a customer last year I  decided to buy a label printer and now look at our deadly tea bags ...
31/01/2026

Thanks to some feedback from a customer last year I decided to buy a label printer and now look at our deadly tea bags

Always open to feedback and making our customer experiences better.

Might take time but we got there.

We wish to let our community, customers and partners know that we are currently experiencing technical difficulties with...
26/01/2026

We wish to let our community, customers and partners know that we are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our ordering system, website and business email.

If you have placed an order with Yarbun Creations in the last two weeks and have not yet received your order, we kindly ask that you please resend your order confirmation to:

[email protected]

If you have any questions, concerns, or general enquiries, please also contact us via this email while we work to resolve these issues.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17tP9bTDW1/
21/01/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17tP9bTDW1/

Stand in solidarity with Ruth Langford / tipruthanna as she faces criminal charges for protecting Country in Lutruwita.

Ruth is a Yorta Yorta / Dja Dja Wurrung woman, born in Tasmania and deeply connected to the Palawa Aboriginal community. She holds cultural responsibility to uphold the Palawa Law of Country by her senior Elder Puralia Meenammatta/ Jim Everett.

Last year, Ruth was arrested during peaceful forest protection actions with our foundation at Snow Hill and Lonnavale in Lutruwita / Tasmania, defending ancient trees and waterways from destructive logging. Yesterday, Ruth faced court and was adjourned until 27 March.

She now faces trespass charges carrying a potential prison sentence of up to 12 months. Ruth is representing herself and has pleaded not guilty, arguing she was acting in self-defence under her cultural obligation to protect Country.

In the lead up to Invasion Day, can you stand with Palawa elders by emailing the Tasmania Police and call on them to drop the charges against Ruth Langford?

📧 Email [email protected]

Taking action ahead of January 26 is a powerful way to affirm that Law lives in Country, and that protecting forests, water and life should never be criminalised.

➡️ Learn more by following Stand with Unc Jim

📸 Ramji Ambrosiussen

01/01/2026

Plants uses and medicines near Woorabinda with Uncle Steve Kemp😍😍😍

A short documentary about one man's passion for his culture and the traditional ecological knowledge his father gave him. Part of a series funded by the Fitzroy Basin Association in Central Queensland. See Uncle Steve describe the practical and medicinal uses that his people have for plants in the area.

Uncle Steve has his own business based in Mackay, QLD, and he can be contacted via his FB page Yarbun Creations Alternatively his bush medicine and other products can be purchased from his website:

Yarbun Creations @ https://www.yarbuncreations.com.au/bush-medicine/

To view the information visit the weblink below:
https://fnfmba.au/index.php/botanicals/plants-uses-and-medicines-near-woorabinda-with-steve-kemp

Happy New Year everyone hope you have all had a safe and happy Festive season. We will have capsules back in stock over ...
01/01/2026

Happy New Year everyone hope you have all had a safe and happy Festive season.

We will have capsules back in stock over the next week. My mum just got back from Ghungalu country and collected fresh.

We are working g hard to dry and prepare!

Ill post in the page when the website has them back in stock!!

Address

Pirie Street
Mackay, QLD
4740

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